We had an ordination service at our church this evening. There were seven men ordained for service as deacons. Most of them were young, as I was when I became a deacon almost 30 years ago.
Different churches handle the ordination ceremony
differently, I’m sure. At our
church all the ordained men in the assembly are invited to line up and pray
over the new deacons and lay hands on them. Tonight it was my privilege to line up with a large group to
pray and lay hands on those making new commitments to serve Christ and the
church
To the casual observer, this process must seem strange. It certainly is unusual. The ordination service is the longest
and quietest service of the year.
It’s a squirmy kid’s worst nightmare. Yet I can tell you from my own experiences, it can be quite
meaningful.
On the night of my ordination, about a hundred men lined up
to pray over me and others who were also being ordained. I was 31 years old at the time. Many of the men there to participate in
the service seemed ancient to me, though they were probably about the age I am
now, which is 60.
I think about that night sometimes as a reminder of how old
I look to anyone born after 1970.
I don’t feel old now, and doubtless most of those men did not feel old
then, but they looked ancient to me.
I’m told there was an era in our past when older men and
women were held in the highest esteem.
Younger men and women sought their counsel. The words of the elderly carried weight. That’s not always true anymore. Even in the church it is more common to
celebrate youth and view the older generation with all the enthusiasm of a
history final.
Yet there is wisdom to be found and fellowship to be enjoyed
with those who might be twice your age, or even older. Some of those who stood in that line to
bless me almost 30 years ago taught me great lessons and gave me great
encouragement. Memories of those
men give me a sense of joy and gratitude.
One of the older deacons in line the night of my ordination
was John Stophel. All the gentlemen
of Downton Abbey on their very best behavior could not match John in his
formality and courtesy. I grew to
admire him as the most prepared man, and perhaps the most diligent worker, I
ever met. Yet he was never unkind
to those like me who were often less prepared and less diligent.
Another in the line was Shelley Bostick. I grew to admire Shelley as the most
humble of servants, but also as a man of great resolve and courage. Shelley and his wife Lyda loved
children, and they spent countless hours caring for every child that passed
through our church doors. After
his death I learned that during the troubled 60s, when his Black neighbors were
threatened, Shelley went at night and sat in his neighbor’s front yard to
confront a carload of racists who wanted to cause trouble. What love and courage!
Bernard Stone was in that line. Bernard was short—almost elf-like in appearance and
countenance. He always had a smile
and a joke. What I admired most
about Bernard, however, was the way he treated his wife Betty. She was even shorter than Bernard and
with a bigger smile. The way
Bernard and Betty treated each other was something every young married couple
should see.
Another in line was Lawrence Bryant. More than 50 years ago our church began
to televise its weekly services, and almost from the beginning Lawrence as in
the control booth. He knew every
inch of wire, every solder and switch.
Each week the service went live on time because Lawrence was there to
keep the equipment running, a job that could not be done just in an hour on
Sundays. Lawrence recruited me to
be a director of the broadcast, but he was always in control. Never once did I hear him raise his
voice or say an unkind word to anyone on the crew, even when we messed up.
As these men and so many others prayed over me that night in
1983, I experienced something almost otherworldly. With my head bowed and eyes closed, voice after voice
successively hovered over me and whispered down, I could not tell who was
speaking. Unknown hands touched my
head, which began to spin and wobble as if I was in a small boat on large
waves.
In the middle of the disorienting chorus of whispers, two
firm hands grasped my head and a clear voice came close and said, “Bill, this
is Barton, and I want you to know you are very special to me.” Then he prayed.
That was Barton Thigpen, who I met the first week I was a
member at church. Barton’s great
gift was encouragement, and he was certainly encouraging to me. Of all the men who prayed over me that
night, Barton was the only one who made it personal. And frankly, his prayer is the only one I remember.
The Lord works in mysterious ways. About 20 years later I got a call from Darryl Craft, who was
at that time our new pastor, the first pastor I ever had who was younger than
me. Darryl said, “Barton Thigpen’s
had a stroke. I’m going to pick
you up and we’ll go see him.” Darryl
had never called me to do anything remotely like that before, and he never did
after. Why he called me that
day—well, as the old people say, “Lord only knows.”
When we arrived at the emergency room the staff let the
pastor—and me with him--speed right to the trauma room where Barton was lying
on a gurney. Not even the family
was there. Darryl spoke words of
comfort and prayed over Him. Then
Barton looked my way. I held his
hand as he struggled to speak. He
said, “I love you, Bill.” He died
two days later. Those had to be
some of the last words he spoke.
Love, diligence, courage, compassion, kindness,
faithfulness, encouragement—these are critical elements of the Christian
life. I am grateful for older men
who showed me these things, modeled these things, taught me with action and not
just words.
I’m struck by the reality that I am now the older man, and
that there is heavy responsibility that goes with the title. It’s not enough to just speak. It’s not enough to just go through the
ceremony. It takes more than a
disembodied prayer to pass along a blessing.
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